• Hungary sets scoring record, joins Croatia, Italy and Serbia in QF

    Italy, Hungary and Serbia followed Croatia to the quarter-finals after convincing wins in the last round of the prelims. Hungary indeed needed a 20-goal victory to build a better goal-difference than Spain and its match ended up in a 26-0 rout of Malta, the first shutout since 2001, a new scoring record for this tournament and the hosts also tied the largest-ever win in the history of the Europeans.

    Men’s preliminaries, Round 3
    Group A: Slovakia v Croatia 4-16, Germany v Montenegro 3-10
    Rankings: 1. Croatia 9, 2. Montenegro 6, 3. Germany 3, 4. Slovakia 0
    Group B: Romania v Russia 11-10, Serbia v Netherlands 11-4
    Rankings: 1. Serbia 9, 2. Russia 3, 3. Romania 3, 4. Netherlands 3
    Three-way tie (goal-difference based on the results against each other: RUS +5, ROU 0, NED –5)
    Group C: Turkey v Spain 7-24, Malta v Hungary 0-26
    Rankings: 1. Hungary 7 (+40), 2. Spain (+33) 7, 3. Turkey 3, 4. Malta 0
    Group D: France v Greece 10-12, Italy v Georgia 18-6
    Rankings: 1. Italy 9, 2. Greece 6, 3. Georgia 3, 4. France 0

    Fixtures for Monday
    Eight-finals: Montenegro v Turkey (QF v Italy), Germany v Spain (QF v Serbia),
    Russia v Georgia (QF v Hungary), Romania v Greece (QF v Croatia)
    For places 13-16th: Slovakia v Malta, Netherlands v France

    The scoring race between Spain and Hungary offered the biggest excitements on the last day of the prelims. It kicked off early as the Spaniards started the day with the game against Turkey. Though the opening period was surprisingly close (3-5), then they geared up and by the end of the third quarter they already managed to produce the same score-line Hungary achieved at the end of the game against the Turks (5-19). After the 8-goal rush in the third, Spain could add five more in the closing period, thus the bar was raised high as the Hungarians needed a 20-goal win to finish ahead of their group-rival.

    However, the Spaniards told immediately after their game that the Hungarian shooting machine should produce enough goals to finish atop – and they saw the future. In the evening the Magyars left no chance for their rivals as they heavily guarded them at the back, so Malta’s first shot on target arrived with 2:06 to go in the second. By then the hosts completed the first half of the journey as they took a 10-0 lead, by halftime they were already 13-0 up.

    With 1:07 to go in the third they had it at 20-0 and stopped at 26 much to the delight of the home crowd which filled the stands once more (the number of shots, 36-14, on target: 30-5, told the story). Gergo Zalanki netted 7 goals (from 7 shots), also a new individual scoring record in this event.

    The 26-goal win ties the Greeks’ record from 2018 when they beat Turkey 27-1, it’s also a new scoring record in this event (Spain netted 24 twice), though still two goals shy of Spain’s 28-goal single-match scoring effort from 1991 (against Great Britain). It was the first shutout in the men’s tournament since Spain had beaten the Netherlands 4-0 here in Budapest in 2001.

    Croatia and Montenegro didn’t leave any room for doubt in Group A. The Croats smashed Slovakia with ease (Andro Buslje enjoyed a perfect afternoon with 5 goals from 5 shots) and the battle for the second place was also one-sided between the Montenegrins and the Germans. The latter ones could hold on until the middle the second period, than, after 1-2, the Montenegrins netted three in 1:43 minutes and never looked back.

    The only hiccup occurred in Group B where Romania seized the opportunity that Russia could afford a narrow loss and still kept its second place. The difference in motivation was mirrored by the scoreboard, the Romanians scored four connecting goals after 1-3 in the second and they kept the lead for the remaining time. This win came at the cost of the Netherlands which beat the Romanians on the opening day but a big loss to Russia led to their drop to the 4th place.

    On paper, beating the Serbs seemed to be out of reach for the Dutch, though they made a serious try, led 0-1 after the first period and 1-2 late in the second while the Serbs were nowhere near to their real level (netted 3 goals from 15 shots). Still, with a double in 63 seconds they went ahead by halftime (3-2), but the Dutch pushed on, regained the lead at 3-4.

    That was the point when the Olympic champions switched to combat mood and staged a 5-0 rush till the end of the third: buried two man-ups virtually from the goal-line, Andrija Prlainovic added two action goals in 36 seconds, and one more came from Nikola Dedovic for a commanding 8-4 lead. And it continued the same way in the fourth, the Serbs netted three, while the Dutch remained scoreless till the end, in fact for the last 13:16 minutes.

    The French also tried to complete a ‘mission impossible’ and to beat Greece in Group D in order to stay on board. The Greeks were superior in the first half, built a 2-6 lead but the French went ‘all-in’ in the third, netted six goals and before the last period they trailed by only one goal. However, the Greeks didn’t let it go (though they were in the same comfortable situation as the Russians), at 9-10 they netted two in 65 seconds and that closed down the game. Italy then thrashed the Georgians with a 6-0 rush in the last quarter to secure the first place and some extra resting days.

    For more details, detailed statistics, play-by-play descriptions visit:
    http://wp2020budapest.microplustiming.com

    Press release from LEN , images courtesy of Deepbluemedia

  • Gauteng MEC for Education Panyaza Lesufi says an independent forensic investigation will be conducted into the death of 13-year-old Keamohetswe Shaun Seboko. The grade-7 learner drowned on Wednesday in a swimming pool at the school’s hostel.

  • Check out video highlights from the opening session of the MHC Invitational on Saturday afternoon.

  • Professional swimmers at the TYR Pro Swim Series in Knoxville hosted a clinic to help elementary swimmers with Tennessee Aquatics perfect their form.

  • A short film documenting Brandon and I’s trek to conquer swimming under 14 inches of ice. Located in Prior Lake, MN, this story documents the planning, execution, and aftermath of our swim.

  • In 2016 a Florida man attempted to run from Boca Raton, FL to Bermuda in a home-made, inflatable plastic bubble. Reza Baluchi had been warned by the Coast Guard that any efforts to attempt his journey would be futile and result in severe legal and financial retribution. However, Reza’s convictions and ambition left him undeterred by such threats – he’d been waiting his whole life to do this and nothing was going to stop him. This is the story of that fateful journey as told by the man who attempted it.

  • Hungary clinches first place, Slovakia writes history

    Hungary clinched the first place in Group A after winning a brilliant game against Greece. The other favorites all blew their respective rivals away, Russia scored 34, the third-best effort in the all-time single-game scoring rankings. Slovakia wrote history by claiming a historic first win at the European Championships, it came at the expense of Serbia.

    Women’s preliminaries, Round 4
    Group A: Hungary v Greece 13-10, Russia v Croatia 34-1, Slovakia v Serbia 6-2
    Standings: 1. Hungary 12, 2. Russia 9, 3. Greece 9, 4. Slovakia 3, 5. Croatia 3, 6. Serbia 0
    Group B: Germany v Spain 4-19, Netherlands v France 18-1, Italy v Israel 17-1
    Standings: 1. Netherlands 12, 2. Spain 12, 3. Italy 6, 4. France 6, 5. Israel 0, 6. Germany 0

    Another thrilling evening took place in the Duna Arena where 3,000 fans went wild as Hungary was rushing to an 11-6 lead against Greece in the fourth period of the game which was crucial in wake of the final rankings in Group A.

    The match was a masterpiece of women’s water polo, the action-packed opening period saw 4 goals apiece as the offenses were devastating at both ends. With two quick exchanges the sides reached 6-6 by the middle of the second, then Hungary’s defence started clicking – and that froze the Greeks for as long as 13:53 minutes.

    During this phase, the home side netted 5 in a row – their New-Zealand born center-forward Rebecca Parkes was outstanding in front of the goal, scored two action goals and a man-up – so they led 11-6 early in the fourth. Then the Greeks came back to life and by hitting three in a span of 94 seconds they came back to 11-9. They even killed a double man-down but couldn’t add one more and with 3:04 to go Krisztina Garda’s magnificent shot from 7m (her 4th goal in the game) killed the Greeks’ momentum. Margarita Plevritou buried a man-up 1:38 from time but Dora Leimeter also sent the ball home in a 6 on 5 to secure the Magyars’ win and their top spot in the group.

    The preceding match was also an exciting one as Slovakia managed to beat the Serbs and claim its first-ever victory in the history of the Europeans. The only new team of the field – compared to 2018 – had one appearance before, in 1993, when they lost all their six matches in Leeds. Here they lost three more – as expected against the giants of the group – but now they seized the opportunity and outplayed the Serbs in all aspects of the game. The defenses were outstanding, especially Slovakian goalie Kristina Horvathova, who finished the match with a sensational 88.2% saving percentage (14 stops on 16 attempts, including a penalty catch). The Serbs could score at 2-0, after 13:24 minutes, but then they sank and their following (and last) goal came at 6-1, 24 seconds from time, after another scoreless period of 18:12 minutes. This has set up an ‘all-in’ match between Slovakia and Croatia for the 4th place and a spot in the quarters.

    The other encounters were even more one-sided than in the initial phase of the tournament. As the heavy favourites are gearing up and getting their right rhythm, the lower-ranked sides are finding harder and harder to score against them. The Germans could net four against Spain, but Croatia, France, and Israel was limited to a single goal in their respective matches.

    The Russians bettered their own scoring record in Budapest as they netted 34 against Croatia (hit 31 against Slovakia on the opening day, and now already stands with 100 goals). This was the third-best offensive effort in the history of the Europeans – the Netherlands 37-goal blast against Sweden in the first edition in Oslo 1985 is still a standing record, the Russians came close in Barcelona 2018 when they scored 35 against Turkey.

    For more details, detailed statistics, play-by-play descriptions visit:
    http://wp2020budapest.microplustiming.com

    Press release from LEN, images courtesy of Deepbluemedia

  • This nerve-wracking footage shows a daring diver taking a swim – with a group of CROCODILES.

    Roberto Ocha can be seen floating inches from the mighty predators as he filmed a documentary about marine life in the Gardens of The Queen, Cuba.

    The ocean videographer, of Guayaquil in Ecuador, captured the footage in March 2019.

  • Using a swim specific snorkel is a really good way to improve and develop your Freestyle stroke. Heather is here to cover everything from what a swimming snorkel is to how and why you can use one!